This section describes how the server uses character sets for constructing error messages and returning them to clients. For information about the language of error messages (rather than the character set), see Section 9.2, “Setting the Error Message Language”.
        As of MySQL 5.5, the server constructs error messages using
        UTF-8 and returns them to clients in the character set specified
        by the character_set_results
        system variable.
      
The server constructs error messages as follows:
The message template uses UTF-8.
Parameters in the message template are replaced with values that apply to a specific error occurrence:
Identifiers such as table or column names use UTF-8 internally so they are copied as is.
Character (nonbinary) string values are converted from their character set to UTF-8.
Binary string values are copied as is for bytes in the range
0x20to0x7E, and using\xhex encoding for bytes outside that range. For example, if a duplicate-key error occurs for an attempt to insert0x41CF9Finto aVARBINARYunique column, the resulting error message uses UTF-8 with some bytes hex encoded:Duplicate entry 'A\xC3\x9F' for key 1
        To return a message to the client after it has been constructed,
        the server converts it from UTF-8 to the character set specified
        by the character_set_results
        system variable. If
        character_set_results has a
        value of NULL or binary,
        no conversion occurs. No conversion occurs if the variable value
        is utf8, either, because that matches the
        original error message character set.
      
        For characters that cannot be represented in
        character_set_results, some
        encoding may occur during the conversion. The encoding uses
        Unicode code point values:
      
Characters in the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP) range (
0x0000to0xFFFF) are written using\notation.nnnnCharacters outside the BMP range (
0x01000to0x10FFFF) are written using\+notation.nnnnnn
        Clients can set
        character_set_results to
        control the character set in which they receive error messages.
        The variable can be set directly, or indirectly by means such as
        SET NAMES.
        For more information about
        character_set_results, see
        Section 9.1.4, “Connection Character Sets and Collations”.
      
Prior to MySQL 5.5, the server constructs error messages and returns them to clients as follows:
The message template has the character set associated with the error message language. For example, English, Korean, and Russian messages use
latin1,euckr, andkoi8r, respectively.Parameters in the message template are replaced with values that apply to a specific error occurrence. These parameters use their own character set. Identifiers such as table or column names use UTF-8. Data values retain their character set. For example, in the following duplicate-key message,
'has the character set of the table column associated with key 1:xxx'Duplicate entry '
xxx' for key1
The preceding method of error-message construction can result in messages that contain a mix of character sets unless all items involved contain only ASCII characters.
        For MySQL 5.5 and higher, the encoding that occurs during the
        conversion to
        character_set_results before
        returning error messages to clients can result in different
        message content compared to earlier versions. For example, if an
        error occurs for an attempt to drop a table named
        ペ (KATAKANA LETTER PE) and
        character_set_results is a
        character set such as latin1 that does not
        contain that character, the resulting message sent to the client
        has an encoded table name:
      
ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table '\30DA'
Before MySQL 5.5, the name is not encoded:
ERROR 1051 (42S02): Unknown table 'ペ'